PLoS ONE (Jan 2017)

As time passes by: Observed motion-speed and psychological time during video playback.

  • Thomas Jonathan Nyman,
  • Eric Per Anders Karlsson,
  • Jan Antfolk

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0177855
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 6
p. e0177855

Abstract

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Research shows that psychological time (i.e., the subjective experience and assessment of the passage of time) is malleable and that the central nervous system re-calibrates temporal information in accordance with situational factors so that psychological time flows slower or faster. Observed motion-speed (e.g., the visual perception of a rolling ball) is an important situational factor which influences the production of time estimates. The present study examines previous findings showing that observed slow and fast motion-speed during video playback respectively results in over- and underproductions of intervals of time. Here, we investigated through three separate experiments: a) the main effect of observed motion-speed during video playback on a time production task and b) the interactive effect of the frame rate (frames per second; fps) and motion-speed during video playback on a time production task. No main effect of video playback-speed or interactive effect between video playback-speed and frame rate was found on time production.